Logansport Pharos-Tribune from Logansport, Indiana · Page 45

Page 45 article text (OCR)

Tuesday
Evening,
x
December
3,
1957.
ON
DISPLAY
AT
THE
AUTO
SHOW
An
American
symbol
of
classic
design,
the
new
Continental
Mark
III
models
open
a
new
era
in
the
luxury
car
field.
For
the
first
time
since
the
introduction
of
this
prestige-leader
of
American
cars,
Continental
in
1958
offers
a
full
line
of
models
including
a
lour-door
hardtop
sedan,
a
unique
retractable
top
convertible,
a
regular
sedan
ana
a
two-door
hardtop
coupe,
all
in
the
traditional
and
elegant
design
of
past
continentals.
A
new,
high
compression
engine
rated
at
375
horsepower
at
4800
rpm
powers
the
new
Continental
which
pioneers
an
all-new
integrated
body
and
frame
Construction
in
the
fine
car
field.
Piper
Laurie
Makes
New
Bid
for
Acting
Stardom
NEW
YORK
(UP)—The
lettuce
is
green
in
the
movies,
but
greener
still
is
the
grass
of
television—
as
far
as
Piper
Laurie
is
concerned.
•
Laurie,
a
hazel-eyed
beauty
from
Detroit,
decided
to
bust
out
of
her
long-term
contract
with
Universal-
Hoosiers
Win
Top
Honors
At
Stock
Show
CHICAGO
(UP)—The
two
champions
in
the
Indiana
State
Fair
4-H
steer
competition
three
months
ago
switched
places
Saturday
in
Lauri'rVarticularry'
>
'anyway..
JU
And
an
all-Hoosier
sweep
of
the
top
'
in
the
junior
division
of
the
Arts"
and
the
forthcoming
"Twelfth
Night."
Miss
Laurie
drained
her
tea.
"You
know,
about
a
year
ago
I
even
decided
I
would
go
back
to
my
real
name—Rosetta
Jacobs-
It
was
late
in
1955
that
Miss
-I
was
so
anxious
to
re-do
myself.
I've
never
liked
the
name
Piper
1'
know
some
people
think
of
,
-.
name
as-
a
kind
of
Hollywood'
58th
annual
International
in
Hollywood.
She
j
phoniness.
stock
show
.
was
earning
$1500
a
week,
but!
"But
in
a
way
it
would
be
just
getting
nowhere
fast
playing
a
fas
phony
now
to
change
my
of
sweet
roles
in
sour!
name
back
again.
It
International
Live-
Mrs.
Sue
Secondino,
19,
West
Terre
.Haute,
Ind.,
grabbed
the
i"^'
ent
Th
i
•
f
T
f
V-
m
"
grand
championship
with
a
Here-
portant.
The
only
important
thing
if
rt
„,„„.
*
olt
^,.
Wnrovmnnn
.,
tn
m
r
or
seer
ne
.
tome
now
is
to
go
on
improving
M
Wo
ebbeking,
19,
WooBburn,
as
an
actress.
And
that
I've
de-
,„,,
.,,v
------
th
°'
'*
„•,„„„,:'
setta."
pictures.
"They
called
me
a
movie
star,
but
I
always
turned
my
hear
1
,
the;
cidecl,
has
nothing
to
do
with
other
way
in
embarrassment
when
j
whether
I'm
called
Piper
or
Ro-
*
I
cnf-f
ft
"
I
heard
the
term,"
said
Miss
Laurie
as
she
took
dainty
sips
of
tea.
She
had
just
been
sprung
from
rehearsals
of
"Twelfth
Night,"
a
Shakespearean
romp
that
NBC-TV
will
deliver
on
Dec.
15.
She
looked
troubled.
Never
a
Real'Star
"In
my
mind,
I
never
was
a
.
.__.
real
movie
star.
I
don't
think
hav-!
W.
Binford
of
Indianapolis
was
ing
your
name
over
a
picture
j
elected
president
of
the
United
ord
sleer
named
"Honeymoon.
Binford
to
Head
U.
S.
Auto
Club
INDIANAPOLIS
(UP)—Thomas
makes
you
a
movie
star.
I
think
there
are
very
few
real
movie
stars
anyway
—
I'd
say
a
half-
dozen,"
she
said
softly,
almost
inaudibly.
"But
I
simply
fell
into
a
trap
in
Hollywood.
I
have
no
excuse
for
it
except
I
was
terribly
young
and
naive.
I
don't
think
I
can
be
blamed
for
the
image
that
publicity
made
of
me,
but
I
was
responsible
for
doing
a
succession
of
bad
jobs
in
bad
pictures."
After
a
six
-
year
association,
Miss
Laurie
left
her
studio.
She
was
23
at
the
time.
"Some
people
applauded
me
for
what
they
called
my
courage,
integrity
and
wisdon,
but
my
reasons
weren't
noble
at
all,"
sighed
Miss
Laurie.
"My
reasons
were
simple—I
wanted
to
be
a
good
actress
and
I
wasn't
getting
a
chance
to
become
one.
Never
Be
Asliamed
Again
"Perhaps
I
was
too
stupid
to
States
Auto
Club
Monday.
Binford
succeeds
Col.
A.W.
Herrington
of
Indianapolis
who
resigned.
The
board
of
the
USAC
named
Herrington
president
emeritus
and
said
it
"accepted
his
resignation
with
reluctance.
Binford
had
been
a
member
of
the
board
the
last
two
years
and
is
president
of
a
firm
which
has
sponsored
racing
cars.
took
!.,
who
won
the
grand
champion
award
at
the
the
reserve
Bank
Robbers
Collect
$120,0001
nil
Months
Bank
Robbers
2—Col—30
TUE.
INDIANAPOLIS
(OT)
—
Indiana
bank
robbers
have
made
a
utes
of
their
crimes,
and
not
only
was
their
loot
recovered
but
they
are
behind
prison
walls
today.
*
Draws
10-Year
Term
Only
last
week,
Adolphus
$120,000
haul
in
the
first-U
monthsj
of
1957,
and
despite
tlie
fact
six
of
the
eight
holdups
have
been
A
b
ra
"m
S
,
"«,'
solved
more
than
80
per
cent
of;
'.
•.
,
.
the
loot
still
is
missing.
-
!
a
10
'y
ear
Pnson
•
ternr
for
the
Numerically
speaking,
this
has
I*
4
-
137
holdu
P
o£
a
Mooresville
bank
been
a
Toad
year
for
the
men
who!
Nov.
7.
He
was
arrested
14
min-
champ
i
onsh
ip
scoop
the
cash
from
the
teller
drawers
and
vaults
of
Hoosier
banks.
"Lone
wolf"
bandits
were
caught
quickly
and
confessed
to
five
of
the
eight-
holdups,
and
a
prime
suspect
was
charged
with
a
sixth.
Yet
only
about
$18,000
was
recovered,
.the
records
show.
Christopher
L.
Magee,
40,
Chicago,
was
the
latest
alleged
bandit
to
be
caught
in
the
snares
of
relentless
law
enforcement
authorities.
He
was
arrested
only
last
week
and
charged
with
the
$46,000
holdup
of
a
South
Bend
bank
last
Jan;
15,
Indiana's
first
such
holdup
of
1957.
Second
Biggeiit
Haul
But
Magee
issued
no
confession
and
he
didn't
lead
police
to
any
well-hidden
cache
of
cash.
That
546,000
lost
was
the
second
biggest
haul
of
the
year
ii>
Hoos-
ierland.
The
biggest
was
at
Fort
Wayne,
where
three
men
got
$50,104
only
six
weeks
ago
and
vanished.
They
still
have
not
been
caught
and
the
loot,
naturally,
has
not
been
recovered.
Likewise,
the
three
men
who
robbed
a
Mount
Summit
bank
of
$6,000
Nov.
18
escaped
capture
thus
far
in
the
state's
most
recent
bank
holdup.
Otherwise,
the
story
was
a
different
one.
Five
other
bank
robbers
were
caught
almost
immediately,
some
of
them
within
min-
with
an
Angus.
Mrs.
Secondino
won
the
reserve
championship
at
this
year's
state
fair.
But
hor
steer
was
judged
best
of
more
than
200
entries
here
and
she
became
the
first
wife
to
win
the
event
in
the
history
of
the
show.
The
calf
got
its
name
because
it
was
bought
shortly
after
Mrs.
Secondino
and
her
husband,
Pete,
were
married
last
Feb.
23.
The
ste;er
was
bred
at
the
Strauss
Medina
Hereford
Ranch
near
San
Antonio,
Tex.,
and
raised
|
on
the
5M-acre
farm
of
Sue's
father,
Max
Linderman.
v
The
Woebbeking
Angus
was
an
all-Hoosier
animal
raised
on
the
same
Allen
County
farm
which
has
produced
the
last
three
grand
chambpion
steers
at
the
Indiana
State
Fair.
Bruce
Baker,
14,
Fairmount,
Ind.,
won
the
championship
in
the
Logansport,
Indiana,
Pharos-Tribune
Twenty-on*
ON
DISPLAY
AT
THE
AUTO
SHOW
utes
after
the
holdup.
Other
bandits
were
caught
and
punished
for
holdups
at
Patoka,
Scllersburg,
Sweetser
and
Crah-
dall.
.
The
most
sensational
holdup
of
the
year
involved
little
money-
only
$1,655
stolen
from
the
Sellersburg
State
Bank.
But
it
made
headlines
all
over
the
land.
William
Hassett,
25,
Louisville,
the
bandit,
made
the
mistake
of
killing
State
Policeman
Melvin|^_
Walts,
49,
when
Walts
stopped
him|
divisi
said
thnt
all
that
wou
j
d
at
a
blockade.
In
revenge,
and
to|
be
needed
beyond
this
technical
save
his
own
life,
Hie
Rev.
Robert
W.
Gingery,
a
New
Albany
Methodist
minister,
shot
Hassett
dead
with
the
fallen
trooper's
riot
gun.
,
The
biggest
and
most
luxurious
Mercury
ever
bullt-the
new
Park
Lane
series—was
designed
to
«I>
(peal
to
the
more
discriminating
buyers
in
the
uppcr-mcdlum
price
bracket.
Striking
styling
features
and
Ibig
car
size—220.2
inches
long
and
125-inch
whcclbase—distinguish
the
Park
Lane.
Mercury
will
offer
tft
Imodels
for
1958,
The
Park
Lane
scries
Includes
a
convertible,
a
phaeton
coupe
and
«
phaeton
sed»J\
(pictured
Jiere.
U.
S.
Capable
of
Sending
Satellite
Around
Moon
NEW
YORK
(UP)—A
prominent
astronautical
engineer
said
today
that
the
United
States
"will
be
technically
capable
within
five
to
6
years
of
sending
a
manned
sat-
would
be
"authorization
from
the
proper
officials
and
the
great
amount
of
money
needed
for
the
program."
Ehricke
is
here
to
attend
the
American
Rocket
Society
meeting.
PLAN
MOSCOW
VISIT
CAIRO
—
The
Egyptian
cabinet
Sunday
nighi,
approved
formation
of
a
17-man
delegation
headed
by
Industry
Minister
Aziz
Sidki
to
leave
for
Moscow
in
the
next
few
days
to
discuss
Russia's
ellite
supply
ship
into
space
and
j
i
oa
n
to
this
country.
A
spokesman
within
8
to
10
years
of
sending,
aisaid
the
cabinet
also
approved
ship
on
a
flight'around
the
moon."
j
plans
whereby
Egypt's
five-year
Krafft
Ehricke,
one
of
the
Ger?
j
industrialization
plan
—
for
which
man
developers
of
the
V-2
rocket
the
Russian
aid
was
mainly
fle-
and
now
a
technician
with
the
signed
—
will
be
cpmpleted
in-
General
Dynamics"
Corp.,
Convair
stead
in
three
years.
Spokesmen
for
both
the
NAACP
and
the
school
board
agreed
that
a
concentration
of
the
Negro
pop-
NAACP
Claims
Discrimination
In
Chicago
CHICAGO
(UP)
—
The
National
j
ulation
on
Chicago's
South
Side
has
resulted
in
some
schools
being
all
Negro.
Others
in
different
sections
of
the
city
are
all
white,
the
spokesmen
said.
But
the
NAACP
said
also
that
Negro
schools
get
secondary
buildings
and
teachers,
while
white
schools
get
preferential
treatment
in
both
categories.
Birchmai
said
the
NAACP
does
not
think
the
Chicago
school
board
Association
for
the
Advancement
of
Colored
People
has
accused
the
Chicago
Board
of
Education
of
using
policies
of
racial
discrimination.
Robert
L.
Birchman,
Illinois
NAACP,
director,
said
Saturday
that
in
many
ways
Chicago
schools
practice
racial
discrimination
"more
than
they
do
in
Little
Rock."
The
board
denied
the
charge,
but
practices
discrimination
by
intent.
Birchman
said
the
NAACP
will
i
He
said,
however,
that
"we
want
start
a
campaign,
probably
thisj'o
know
whether
they
are
pro
or
month,
to
force
the
board
to
de-i^on
on
segregation
and
what
they
clare
itself
on
the
segregation
is-1
P
lan
to
do
about
it
in
either
case."
See
the
car
that's
newest
of
all
for
handling
ease,
features
and
comfort
Other
officers
elected
at
the
Shorthorn
class
with
"Two
Spot"
recognize
the
insecurities
of
going
A
i
len
out
on
my
own.
But
when
I
left
l-SsiiL',
USAC's
winter
meeting
were
which
earned
him
the
right
George
M.
Ober,
Indianapolis,
shtw
the
animal
m
the
£lnals
'
Midwest
vice
president;
Tom
Frost,
Warrenton,
Va.,
Eastern
vice
president;
J.
Gordon
Betz,
Beverly
Hills,
Calif.,
western
vice
president;
William
P.
Nottingham,
Indianapolis,
secretary,
and
Howard
Wilcox,
Indianapolis,
treasurer.
Betz
was
voted
to
the
board
earlier
Monday
along
with
Ted
to
111.,
and
A.C.
Pillsbury,
Beverly
Hills,
Calif.
Duane
Carter,
veteran
race
of
competition
for
the
1958
season.
out
on
my
Universal
I
swore
one
thing
—
I
wouldn't
work
in
anything
I
would
be
ashamed
of
again."
Six
months
after
her
break,
Miss
Laurie
found
a
part—in
a
TV
show,
her
first.
"It
was
a
Robert
Montgomery
program,"
she
recalled,
"not
a
very
big
part
and
not
an
outstanding
script,
but
it
did
have
one
scone
in
it
I
wanted
very
much
to
play.
A
scene
that
gave
me
a
chance
to
act."
A
few
months
later,
Miss
Laurie
connected
again
—
in
another
TV
show,
a
"Front
Row
Center"
j
member
suffered
a
leg
injury
and
production
of
"Wintqr
Dreams."
j
one
passenger
suffered
facial
in-
It
was
a
subsequent.
"Playhouse
,
juries.
90"
drama,
"The
Ninth
Day,"'
that
brought
her
critical
recognition
as
an
actress.
Since
then,
she
has
landed
parts
in
such
classy
TV
capers
as
"Seven
Lively
Cordell
Hull
Award
Goes
To
Clare
Luce
NEW
YORK
(WP)—Clare
Boothe
Luce,
playwright,
onetime
Congresswoman
and
former
U.S.
Ambassador
to
Italy,
was
named
to-
director
i
da
y
as
the
recipient
of
the
third
nnniml
f^nfflntl
T-Tll
11
*ltlf
C1
t*n
fftl*
Russian
Airliner
Smashes
in
Landing
HELSINKI,
Finland
OUP)
—
A
Russian
Aeroflot
.
airliner
from
Moscow
ran
off
a
runway
today
and
cracked
up
in
trying
to
make
a
fogbound
landing.
Airport
officials
said
one
crew
no
fatalities
were
reported.
The
plane,
a
conventional
four-
engined
Hyushin,
apparently
ran
off
the
end
of
the
runway
in
the
fog.
annual
Cordell
Hull
award
for
leadership
in
building
U.S.
foreign
economic
policy.
.
The
award,
to
be
presented
at
a
public
rally
Dec.
10
at
the
Waldorf-Astoria
Hotel,
is
sponsored
by
the
Committee
on
Foreign
Trade
Education,
Inc.
It
commemorates
former
Secretary
of
State
Cordell
Hull
who
in
1934
introduced
the
•Reciprocal
Trades
Agreements
Program,
designed
to
expand
this
country's
trade
with
other
nations
by
the
reciprocal
reduction
of
high
tariffs
and
other
barriers.
Previous
recipients
of
the
award
are
Sen.
Albert
Gore
(iD-Tenn.)
and
Paul
G.
Hoffman,
former
administrator
of
the
Economic
Cooperation
Administration.
PLYMOUTH
<
"Seems
that
everyone's
ordering
new
Pliymouths"
You'll
find
plenty
of
good
reasons
why
so
many
people
are
deserting
old
favorites
for
the
new
Plymouth-Plymouth's
satin-smooth
Torsion-Aire
Ride,
Silver
Dart
Styling
and,
optional
at
low
cost,
Golden
Commando
V-8
engine
that
definitely
stamps
todijy's
Plymouth
ahead
for
keeps.
Star'of
the
Forward
Look..,Star
of
the
Auto
Show...
New
Sports-Car
Spirit
NEW
ROAD-HUGGING
CONTROL
AND
HANDLING
EASE_The
new
Mercury
offers
you
a
whole
series
of
wonderful
driving
aids:
30%
easier
steering,
Super-Safe
self-
adjusting
brakes
that
compensate
for
wear,
new
Merc-O-Matic
Keyboard
Controls;
automatic
power
lubrication,
Speed-limit
Safety
Monitor,
and
much,
much
more.'
plus
Limousine
Ride
SMOOTH,
QUIET-RIDING—BIG-FAMILY
COM
FORT—E
very
1958
Big
M
is
longer;
wider,
heavier
than
any
Mercury
ever
built.
Mercury's
spectacular
size,
plus
the
most
advanced
of
suspension
systems,
gives
a
ride
that
rivals
the
finest
ever
achieved
by
the
costliest
limousine.
Oversized
interiors
give
your
family
room
to
grow
in,
at
an
easy-buy
price
PRICES
START
JUST
ABOVE
THE
LOWEST—Mercury
offers
you
20
models
thia
year,
in
4
series.
Monterey
prices
are
within
reach
of
anyone
who
can
afford
any
new
car.
The
Montclairs
offer
additional
luxury
features
for
only
a
few
dollars
more:
Magnificence
unlimited,
the
entirely
new
Park
Lane
series,
is
also
modestly
priced;
NEW
ADVANCED
STYLING
PROTECTS
YOUR
iNVESTMENT—There
trying
to
copy.
It's
the
kind
of
beauty
preferred
by
those
who
like
to
is
no
chance
that
Mercury
will
look
old-fashioned
before
its
time.
stay
ahead
in
style.
A
bold
departure
from
the
commonplace.
A
wise
Mercury
styling
is
trend-setting
styling—the
kind
others
are
now
investment
for
the
years
ahead.
Stop
in
at
our
showroom
today.^
1958
MERCURY
SPORTS-CAR
SPIRIT
WITH
LIMOUSINE
RID*
Don't
mill
thi
big
rtl.vi.lon
hit,
"THE
ID
SULLIVAN
SHOW,"
Sunday
.vining,
7:00
la
1:00,
Station
WISH,
Channil
t.
HAVENS
MOTORS
INC
Market
Street
at
25th
Logansport,
Ind.
Phone
3507